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Individuals at Risk

This is Our Last Post! Subscribe to the New Amnesty Blog

Dear Reader,

This is our last post to the Amnesty International Individuals at Risk Blog. We are discontinuing our issue-based blogs to launch one new Amnesty International Blog, Human Rights Now, that will cover all human rights news and opportunities for you to make a difference.

Check it out today for the latest Individuals at Risk and human rights news and be sure to subscribe so you won't miss a thing.

Thanks for being a loyal reader,

Individuals at Risk Team

 
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Iran steps up juvenile executions in 2007 and 2008

Days after Iran executed by hanging Reza Hejazi for a crime he committed at age 15, Mohammad Feda'i awaits execution in Iran for a crime he committed when he was only 17.

Feda'i, who was granted a one month stay of execution on August 14, killed a boy named Said during a fight. He was not adequately represented during his trial, yet the Supreme Court has upheld his execution. Feda'i will be executed in September if his family cannot come to an agreement over financial compensation with the family of the boy he killed.

Though Mohammad Feda'i was granted a stay of execution until September, Iran's executioners can be unpredictable. For example, Reza Hejazi's lawyer was told that his execution was halted, only to find out a few hours later that he had been hanged.   

Iran has stepped up its executions of child offenders. From 1990 until 2006, Iran had executed 23 juvenile offenders. In 2007 Iran executed eight child offenders, and since the beginning of 2008, Iran has executed five juvenile offenders. Another 75 juvenile offenders sit on death row, including Naser Qasemi, Mohammad Reza Haddadi and Iman Hashemi, who Amnesty International has released Urgent Actions.

Iran's execution of juvenile offenders violates international law. Iran is a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, both prohibiting the execution of persons whose crime was committed when they were under 18.

To take action to stop Iran from executing more juvenile offenders, please see Urgent Actions 71/08 and 146/08.

 

Chelsea Toy

 

 
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Continued Concern for Eritreans After Deportation from Egypt

Over two months after Egypt began deporting asylum-seekers back to Eritrea on June 11, at least 740 of those deported now sit in the Eritrean Wia prison camp without charge, facing prolonged beatings, stress positions and exposure to extreme heat.

Most of those still in detention are single men and women, as children and pregnant women were released after a few weeks in prison.

In June Egypt deported over 1400 Eritreans, violating the 1951 Refugee Convention and the UN Convention against Torture and going against UN mandates urging countries not to deport any Eritrean asylum-seekers. Many of the asylum-seekers fled Eritrea to escape the country's mandatory military service for anyone between the ages of 18 and 40 and to gain religious freedom.

Amnesty International has been following this case since the deportations began, and we now urge our members to write to both Eritrean and Egyptian authorities asking that both countries follow international law in not torturing those detained and releasing those who are held without recognizable charge. Amnesty International is also requesting that Egypt releases the names of those they deported and that Eritrea releases the names of those still in detention. For further information on this Urgent Action, please see Urgent Action 225/08.

 

Chelsea Toy - Individuals at Risk

 
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Update: Zeynab Bayzeydi Sentenced

On August 8, we posted information regarding our concern for Kurdish women's rights activist Zeynab Bayzeydi, who was jailed in Iran for peacefully defending Iranian women. 

This afternoon, we received notice that Zeynab was sentenced to four years' imprisonment, and internal exile to the Turkish-speaking city of Zanjan, by the Mahabad Revolutionary Court.  Zaynab has been imprisoned for peacefully expressing her views.  She is a prisoner of conscience.  She must be released.

We have issued an updated Urgent Action on Zeynab's behalf.  Please write to Iranian authorities, and demand Zeynab's freedom. 

 

 

Marissa Brodney - Urgent Action Network

 
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Lives in Peril; For Many Too Late

Georgia shelled South Ossetia, Russia shelled Georgia, and we plunged into a war whose victims largely number non-military personnel.  Georgian territory is smoldering.  Amnesty International is gravely concerned that this war has had a disproportionate impact on civilians and civilian objects.

As reports emerged of heavy civilian casualties, Amnesty issued an Urgent Action on behalf of all those living in the disputed region of South Ossetia and in Georgia.  In an official press release, Amnesty expressed concern that some of the attacks mounted in South Ossetia could amount to war crimes.  At the same time, President Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia recently declared that 90 percent of his country's casualties were civilian deaths. 

International humanitarian law prohibits indiscriminate military attacks that do not shield civilians from military operations.  As village after village erupts in flames, it has become merely a question of the degree to which international humanitarian law has been ignored.

The United Nations Refugee Agency reports that this conflict has already resulted in close to 100,000 refugeesAid agencies are struggling to access civilians in need of assistance, as most of the violence has been concentrated in residential areas.  At this point in time, it is critically important that humanitarian relief reach those caught in the crossfire of these warring nations.

 

Marissa Brodney - Urgent Action Network

 
  Modified on August 12, 2008 at 4:23 PM
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